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1968 lines
74 KiB
C
1968 lines
74 KiB
C
/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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*
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* verify_nbtree.c
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* Verifies the integrity of nbtree indexes based on invariants.
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*
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* For B-Tree indexes, verification includes checking that each page in the
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* target index has items in logical order as reported by an insertion scankey
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* (the insertion scankey sort-wise NULL semantics are needed for
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* verification).
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*
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* When index-to-heap verification is requested, a Bloom filter is used to
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* fingerprint all tuples in the target index, as the index is traversed to
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* verify its structure. A heap scan later uses Bloom filter probes to verify
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* that every visible heap tuple has a matching index tuple.
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*
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*
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* Copyright (c) 2017-2018, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
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*
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* IDENTIFICATION
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* contrib/amcheck/verify_nbtree.c
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*
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*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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*/
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#include "postgres.h"
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#include "access/htup_details.h"
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#include "access/nbtree.h"
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#include "access/transam.h"
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#include "access/xact.h"
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#include "catalog/index.h"
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#include "catalog/pg_am.h"
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#include "commands/tablecmds.h"
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#include "lib/bloomfilter.h"
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#include "miscadmin.h"
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#include "storage/lmgr.h"
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#include "utils/memutils.h"
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#include "utils/snapmgr.h"
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PG_MODULE_MAGIC;
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/*
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* A B-Tree cannot possibly have this many levels, since there must be one
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* block per level, which is bound by the range of BlockNumber:
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*/
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#define InvalidBtreeLevel ((uint32) InvalidBlockNumber)
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/*
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* State associated with verifying a B-Tree index
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*
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* target is the point of reference for a verification operation.
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*
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* Other B-Tree pages may be allocated, but those are always auxiliary (e.g.,
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* they are current target's child pages). Conceptually, problems are only
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* ever found in the current target page (or for a particular heap tuple during
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* heapallindexed verification). Each page found by verification's left/right,
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* top/bottom scan becomes the target exactly once.
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*/
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typedef struct BtreeCheckState
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{
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/*
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* Unchanging state, established at start of verification:
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*/
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/* B-Tree Index Relation and associated heap relation */
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Relation rel;
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Relation heaprel;
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/* ShareLock held on heap/index, rather than AccessShareLock? */
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bool readonly;
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/* Also verifying heap has no unindexed tuples? */
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bool heapallindexed;
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/* Per-page context */
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MemoryContext targetcontext;
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/* Buffer access strategy */
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BufferAccessStrategy checkstrategy;
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/*
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* Mutable state, for verification of particular page:
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*/
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/* Current target page */
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Page target;
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/* Target block number */
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BlockNumber targetblock;
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/* Target page's LSN */
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XLogRecPtr targetlsn;
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/*
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* Mutable state, for optional heapallindexed verification:
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*/
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/* Bloom filter fingerprints B-Tree index */
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bloom_filter *filter;
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/* Bloom filter fingerprints downlink blocks within tree */
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bloom_filter *downlinkfilter;
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/* Right half of incomplete split marker */
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bool rightsplit;
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/* Debug counter */
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int64 heaptuplespresent;
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} BtreeCheckState;
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/*
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* Starting point for verifying an entire B-Tree index level
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*/
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typedef struct BtreeLevel
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{
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/* Level number (0 is leaf page level). */
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uint32 level;
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/* Left most block on level. Scan of level begins here. */
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BlockNumber leftmost;
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/* Is this level reported as "true" root level by meta page? */
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bool istruerootlevel;
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} BtreeLevel;
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PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1(bt_index_check);
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PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1(bt_index_parent_check);
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static void bt_index_check_internal(Oid indrelid, bool parentcheck,
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bool heapallindexed);
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static inline void btree_index_checkable(Relation rel);
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static void bt_check_every_level(Relation rel, Relation heaprel,
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bool readonly, bool heapallindexed);
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static BtreeLevel bt_check_level_from_leftmost(BtreeCheckState *state,
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BtreeLevel level);
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static void bt_target_page_check(BtreeCheckState *state);
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static ScanKey bt_right_page_check_scankey(BtreeCheckState *state);
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static void bt_downlink_check(BtreeCheckState *state, BlockNumber childblock,
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ScanKey targetkey);
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static void bt_downlink_missing_check(BtreeCheckState *state);
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static void bt_tuple_present_callback(Relation index, HeapTuple htup,
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Datum *values, bool *isnull,
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bool tupleIsAlive, void *checkstate);
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static inline bool offset_is_negative_infinity(BTPageOpaque opaque,
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OffsetNumber offset);
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static inline bool invariant_leq_offset(BtreeCheckState *state,
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ScanKey key,
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OffsetNumber upperbound);
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static inline bool invariant_geq_offset(BtreeCheckState *state,
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ScanKey key,
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OffsetNumber lowerbound);
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static inline bool invariant_leq_nontarget_offset(BtreeCheckState *state,
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Page other,
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ScanKey key,
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OffsetNumber upperbound);
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static Page palloc_btree_page(BtreeCheckState *state, BlockNumber blocknum);
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/*
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* bt_index_check(index regclass, heapallindexed boolean)
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*
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* Verify integrity of B-Tree index.
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*
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* Acquires AccessShareLock on heap & index relations. Does not consider
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* invariants that exist between parent/child pages. Optionally verifies
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* that heap does not contain any unindexed or incorrectly indexed tuples.
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*/
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Datum
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bt_index_check(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS)
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{
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Oid indrelid = PG_GETARG_OID(0);
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bool heapallindexed = false;
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if (PG_NARGS() == 2)
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heapallindexed = PG_GETARG_BOOL(1);
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bt_index_check_internal(indrelid, false, heapallindexed);
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PG_RETURN_VOID();
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}
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/*
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* bt_index_parent_check(index regclass, heapallindexed boolean)
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*
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* Verify integrity of B-Tree index.
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*
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* Acquires ShareLock on heap & index relations. Verifies that downlinks in
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* parent pages are valid lower bounds on child pages. Optionally verifies
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* that heap does not contain any unindexed or incorrectly indexed tuples.
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*/
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Datum
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bt_index_parent_check(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS)
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{
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Oid indrelid = PG_GETARG_OID(0);
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bool heapallindexed = false;
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if (PG_NARGS() == 2)
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heapallindexed = PG_GETARG_BOOL(1);
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bt_index_check_internal(indrelid, true, heapallindexed);
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PG_RETURN_VOID();
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}
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/*
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* Helper for bt_index_[parent_]check, coordinating the bulk of the work.
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*/
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static void
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bt_index_check_internal(Oid indrelid, bool parentcheck, bool heapallindexed)
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{
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Oid heapid;
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Relation indrel;
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Relation heaprel;
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LOCKMODE lockmode;
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if (parentcheck)
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lockmode = ShareLock;
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else
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lockmode = AccessShareLock;
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/*
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* We must lock table before index to avoid deadlocks. However, if the
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* passed indrelid isn't an index then IndexGetRelation() will fail.
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* Rather than emitting a not-very-helpful error message, postpone
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* complaining, expecting that the is-it-an-index test below will fail.
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*
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* In hot standby mode this will raise an error when parentcheck is true.
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*/
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heapid = IndexGetRelation(indrelid, true);
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if (OidIsValid(heapid))
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heaprel = heap_open(heapid, lockmode);
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else
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heaprel = NULL;
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/*
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* Open the target index relations separately (like relation_openrv(), but
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* with heap relation locked first to prevent deadlocking). In hot
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* standby mode this will raise an error when parentcheck is true.
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*
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* There is no need for the usual indcheckxmin usability horizon test
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* here, even in the heapallindexed case, because index undergoing
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* verification only needs to have entries for a new transaction snapshot.
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* (If this is a parentcheck verification, there is no question about
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* committed or recently dead heap tuples lacking index entries due to
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* concurrent activity.)
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*/
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indrel = index_open(indrelid, lockmode);
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/*
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* Since we did the IndexGetRelation call above without any lock, it's
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* barely possible that a race against an index drop/recreation could have
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* netted us the wrong table.
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*/
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if (heaprel == NULL || heapid != IndexGetRelation(indrelid, false))
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ereport(ERROR,
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(errcode(ERRCODE_UNDEFINED_TABLE),
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errmsg("could not open parent table of index %s",
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RelationGetRelationName(indrel))));
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/* Relation suitable for checking as B-Tree? */
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btree_index_checkable(indrel);
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/* Check index, possibly against table it is an index on */
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bt_check_every_level(indrel, heaprel, parentcheck, heapallindexed);
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/*
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* Release locks early. That's ok here because nothing in the called
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* routines will trigger shared cache invalidations to be sent, so we can
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* relax the usual pattern of only releasing locks after commit.
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*/
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index_close(indrel, lockmode);
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if (heaprel)
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heap_close(heaprel, lockmode);
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}
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/*
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* Basic checks about the suitability of a relation for checking as a B-Tree
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* index.
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*
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* NB: Intentionally not checking permissions, the function is normally not
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* callable by non-superusers. If granted, it's useful to be able to check a
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* whole cluster.
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*/
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static inline void
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btree_index_checkable(Relation rel)
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{
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if (rel->rd_rel->relkind != RELKIND_INDEX ||
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rel->rd_rel->relam != BTREE_AM_OID)
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ereport(ERROR,
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(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
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errmsg("only B-Tree indexes are supported as targets for verification"),
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errdetail("Relation \"%s\" is not a B-Tree index.",
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RelationGetRelationName(rel))));
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if (RELATION_IS_OTHER_TEMP(rel))
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ereport(ERROR,
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(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
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errmsg("cannot access temporary tables of other sessions"),
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errdetail("Index \"%s\" is associated with temporary relation.",
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RelationGetRelationName(rel))));
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if (!IndexIsValid(rel->rd_index))
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ereport(ERROR,
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(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
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errmsg("cannot check index \"%s\"",
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RelationGetRelationName(rel)),
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errdetail("Index is not valid")));
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}
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/*
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* Main entry point for B-Tree SQL-callable functions. Walks the B-Tree in
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* logical order, verifying invariants as it goes. Optionally, verification
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* checks if the heap relation contains any tuples that are not represented in
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* the index but should be.
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*
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* It is the caller's responsibility to acquire appropriate heavyweight lock on
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* the index relation, and advise us if extra checks are safe when a ShareLock
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* is held. (A lock of the same type must also have been acquired on the heap
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* relation.)
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*
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* A ShareLock is generally assumed to prevent any kind of physical
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* modification to the index structure, including modifications that VACUUM may
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* make. This does not include setting of the LP_DEAD bit by concurrent index
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* scans, although that is just metadata that is not able to directly affect
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* any check performed here. Any concurrent process that might act on the
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* LP_DEAD bit being set (recycle space) requires a heavyweight lock that
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* cannot be held while we hold a ShareLock. (Besides, even if that could
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* happen, the ad-hoc recycling when a page might otherwise split is performed
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* per-page, and requires an exclusive buffer lock, which wouldn't cause us
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* trouble. _bt_delitems_vacuum() may only delete leaf items, and so the extra
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* parent/child check cannot be affected.)
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*/
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static void
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bt_check_every_level(Relation rel, Relation heaprel, bool readonly,
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bool heapallindexed)
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{
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BtreeCheckState *state;
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Page metapage;
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BTMetaPageData *metad;
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uint32 previouslevel;
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BtreeLevel current;
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Snapshot snapshot = SnapshotAny;
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/*
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* RecentGlobalXmin assertion matches index_getnext_tid(). See note on
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* RecentGlobalXmin/B-Tree page deletion.
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*/
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Assert(TransactionIdIsValid(RecentGlobalXmin));
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/*
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* Initialize state for entire verification operation
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*/
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state = palloc0(sizeof(BtreeCheckState));
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state->rel = rel;
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state->heaprel = heaprel;
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state->readonly = readonly;
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state->heapallindexed = heapallindexed;
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if (state->heapallindexed)
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{
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int64 total_elems;
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uint64 seed;
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/* Size Bloom filter based on estimated number of tuples in index */
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total_elems = (int64) state->rel->rd_rel->reltuples;
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/* Random seed relies on backend srandom() call to avoid repetition */
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seed = random();
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/* Create Bloom filter to fingerprint index */
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state->filter = bloom_create(total_elems, maintenance_work_mem, seed);
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state->heaptuplespresent = 0;
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/*
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* Register our own snapshot in !readonly case, rather than asking
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* IndexBuildHeapScan() to do this for us later. This needs to happen
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* before index fingerprinting begins, so we can later be certain that
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* index fingerprinting should have reached all tuples returned by
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* IndexBuildHeapScan().
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*
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* In readonly case, we also check for problems with missing
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* downlinks. A second Bloom filter is used for this.
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*/
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if (!state->readonly)
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{
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snapshot = RegisterSnapshot(GetTransactionSnapshot());
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/*
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* GetTransactionSnapshot() always acquires a new MVCC snapshot in
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* READ COMMITTED mode. A new snapshot is guaranteed to have all
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* the entries it requires in the index.
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*
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* We must defend against the possibility that an old xact
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* snapshot was returned at higher isolation levels when that
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* snapshot is not safe for index scans of the target index. This
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* is possible when the snapshot sees tuples that are before the
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* index's indcheckxmin horizon. Throwing an error here should be
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* very rare. It doesn't seem worth using a secondary snapshot to
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* avoid this.
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*/
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if (IsolationUsesXactSnapshot() && rel->rd_index->indcheckxmin &&
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!TransactionIdPrecedes(HeapTupleHeaderGetXmin(rel->rd_indextuple->t_data),
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snapshot->xmin))
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ereport(ERROR,
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(errcode(ERRCODE_T_R_SERIALIZATION_FAILURE),
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errmsg("index \"%s\" cannot be verified using transaction snapshot",
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RelationGetRelationName(rel))));
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}
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else
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{
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int64 total_pages;
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/*
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* Extra readonly downlink check.
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*
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* In readonly case, we know that there cannot be a concurrent
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* page split or a concurrent page deletion, which gives us the
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* opportunity to verify that every non-ignorable page had a
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* downlink one level up. We must be tolerant of interrupted page
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* splits and page deletions, though. This is taken care of in
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* bt_downlink_missing_check().
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*/
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total_pages = (int64) state->rel->rd_rel->relpages;
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state->downlinkfilter = bloom_create(total_pages, work_mem, seed);
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}
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}
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/* Create context for page */
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state->targetcontext = AllocSetContextCreate(CurrentMemoryContext,
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"amcheck context",
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ALLOCSET_DEFAULT_SIZES);
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state->checkstrategy = GetAccessStrategy(BAS_BULKREAD);
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/* Get true root block from meta-page */
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metapage = palloc_btree_page(state, BTREE_METAPAGE);
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metad = BTPageGetMeta(metapage);
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/*
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* Certain deletion patterns can result in "skinny" B-Tree indexes, where
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* the fast root and true root differ.
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*
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* Start from the true root, not the fast root, unlike conventional index
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* scans. This approach is more thorough, and removes the risk of
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* following a stale fast root from the meta page.
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*/
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if (metad->btm_fastroot != metad->btm_root)
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ereport(DEBUG1,
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(errcode(ERRCODE_NO_DATA),
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errmsg("harmless fast root mismatch in index %s",
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RelationGetRelationName(rel)),
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errdetail_internal("Fast root block %u (level %u) differs from true root block %u (level %u).",
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metad->btm_fastroot, metad->btm_fastlevel,
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metad->btm_root, metad->btm_level)));
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/*
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* Starting at the root, verify every level. Move left to right, top to
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* bottom. Note that there may be no pages other than the meta page (meta
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* page can indicate that root is P_NONE when the index is totally empty).
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*/
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previouslevel = InvalidBtreeLevel;
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current.level = metad->btm_level;
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current.leftmost = metad->btm_root;
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current.istruerootlevel = true;
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while (current.leftmost != P_NONE)
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{
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/*
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* Leftmost page on level cannot be right half of incomplete split.
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* This can go stale immediately in !readonly case.
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*/
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state->rightsplit = false;
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/*
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* Verify this level, and get left most page for next level down, if
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* not at leaf level
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*/
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current = bt_check_level_from_leftmost(state, current);
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if (current.leftmost == InvalidBlockNumber)
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ereport(ERROR,
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(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
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errmsg("index \"%s\" has no valid pages on level below %u or first level",
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RelationGetRelationName(rel), previouslevel)));
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previouslevel = current.level;
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}
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/*
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* * Check whether heap contains unindexed/malformed tuples *
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*/
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if (state->heapallindexed)
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{
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IndexInfo *indexinfo = BuildIndexInfo(state->rel);
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HeapScanDesc scan;
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/* Report on extra downlink checks performed in readonly case */
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if (state->readonly)
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{
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ereport(DEBUG1,
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(errmsg_internal("finished verifying presence of downlink blocks within index \"%s\" with bitset %.2f%% set",
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RelationGetRelationName(rel),
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100.0 * bloom_prop_bits_set(state->downlinkfilter))));
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bloom_free(state->downlinkfilter);
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}
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/*
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* Create our own scan for IndexBuildHeapScan(), rather than getting
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* it to do so for us. This is required so that we can actually use
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* the MVCC snapshot registered earlier in !readonly case.
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*
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* Note that IndexBuildHeapScan() calls heap_endscan() for us.
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*/
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scan = heap_beginscan_strat(state->heaprel, /* relation */
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snapshot, /* snapshot */
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0, /* number of keys */
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NULL, /* scan key */
|
|
true, /* buffer access strategy OK */
|
|
true); /* syncscan OK? */
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Scan will behave as the first scan of a CREATE INDEX CONCURRENTLY
|
|
* behaves in !readonly case.
|
|
*
|
|
* It's okay that we don't actually use the same lock strength for the
|
|
* heap relation as any other ii_Concurrent caller would in !readonly
|
|
* case. We have no reason to care about a concurrent VACUUM
|
|
* operation, since there isn't going to be a second scan of the heap
|
|
* that needs to be sure that there was no concurrent recycling of
|
|
* TIDs.
|
|
*/
|
|
indexinfo->ii_Concurrent = !state->readonly;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Don't wait for uncommitted tuple xact commit/abort when index is a
|
|
* unique index on a catalog (or an index used by an exclusion
|
|
* constraint). This could otherwise happen in the readonly case.
|
|
*/
|
|
indexinfo->ii_Unique = false;
|
|
indexinfo->ii_ExclusionOps = NULL;
|
|
indexinfo->ii_ExclusionProcs = NULL;
|
|
indexinfo->ii_ExclusionStrats = NULL;
|
|
|
|
elog(DEBUG1, "verifying that tuples from index \"%s\" are present in \"%s\"",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel),
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->heaprel));
|
|
|
|
IndexBuildHeapScan(state->heaprel, state->rel, indexinfo, true,
|
|
bt_tuple_present_callback, (void *) state, scan);
|
|
|
|
ereport(DEBUG1,
|
|
(errmsg_internal("finished verifying presence of " INT64_FORMAT " tuples from table \"%s\" with bitset %.2f%% set",
|
|
state->heaptuplespresent, RelationGetRelationName(heaprel),
|
|
100.0 * bloom_prop_bits_set(state->filter))));
|
|
|
|
if (snapshot != SnapshotAny)
|
|
UnregisterSnapshot(snapshot);
|
|
|
|
bloom_free(state->filter);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Be tidy: */
|
|
MemoryContextDelete(state->targetcontext);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Given a left-most block at some level, move right, verifying each page
|
|
* individually (with more verification across pages for "readonly"
|
|
* callers). Caller should pass the true root page as the leftmost initially,
|
|
* working their way down by passing what is returned for the last call here
|
|
* until level 0 (leaf page level) was reached.
|
|
*
|
|
* Returns state for next call, if any. This includes left-most block number
|
|
* one level lower that should be passed on next level/call, which is set to
|
|
* P_NONE on last call here (when leaf level is verified). Level numbers
|
|
* follow the nbtree convention: higher levels have higher numbers, because new
|
|
* levels are added only due to a root page split. Note that prior to the
|
|
* first root page split, the root is also a leaf page, so there is always a
|
|
* level 0 (leaf level), and it's always the last level processed.
|
|
*
|
|
* Note on memory management: State's per-page context is reset here, between
|
|
* each call to bt_target_page_check().
|
|
*/
|
|
static BtreeLevel
|
|
bt_check_level_from_leftmost(BtreeCheckState *state, BtreeLevel level)
|
|
{
|
|
/* State to establish early, concerning entire level */
|
|
BTPageOpaque opaque;
|
|
MemoryContext oldcontext;
|
|
BtreeLevel nextleveldown;
|
|
|
|
/* Variables for iterating across level using right links */
|
|
BlockNumber leftcurrent = P_NONE;
|
|
BlockNumber current = level.leftmost;
|
|
|
|
/* Initialize return state */
|
|
nextleveldown.leftmost = InvalidBlockNumber;
|
|
nextleveldown.level = InvalidBtreeLevel;
|
|
nextleveldown.istruerootlevel = false;
|
|
|
|
/* Use page-level context for duration of this call */
|
|
oldcontext = MemoryContextSwitchTo(state->targetcontext);
|
|
|
|
elog(DEBUG2, "verifying level %u%s", level.level,
|
|
level.istruerootlevel ?
|
|
" (true root level)" : level.level == 0 ? " (leaf level)" : "");
|
|
|
|
do
|
|
{
|
|
/* Don't rely on CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS() calls at lower level */
|
|
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS();
|
|
|
|
/* Initialize state for this iteration */
|
|
state->targetblock = current;
|
|
state->target = palloc_btree_page(state, state->targetblock);
|
|
state->targetlsn = PageGetLSN(state->target);
|
|
|
|
opaque = (BTPageOpaque) PageGetSpecialPointer(state->target);
|
|
|
|
if (P_IGNORE(opaque))
|
|
{
|
|
/*
|
|
* Since there cannot be a concurrent VACUUM operation in readonly
|
|
* mode, and since a page has no links within other pages
|
|
* (siblings and parent) once it is marked fully deleted, it
|
|
* should be impossible to land on a fully deleted page in
|
|
* readonly mode. See bt_downlink_check() for further details.
|
|
*
|
|
* The bt_downlink_check() P_ISDELETED() check is repeated here so
|
|
* that pages that are only reachable through sibling links get
|
|
* checked.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (state->readonly && P_ISDELETED(opaque))
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("downlink or sibling link points to deleted block in index \"%s\"",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Block=%u left block=%u left link from block=%u.",
|
|
current, leftcurrent, opaque->btpo_prev)));
|
|
|
|
if (P_RIGHTMOST(opaque))
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("block %u fell off the end of index \"%s\"",
|
|
current, RelationGetRelationName(state->rel))));
|
|
else
|
|
ereport(DEBUG1,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_NO_DATA),
|
|
errmsg("block %u of index \"%s\" ignored",
|
|
current, RelationGetRelationName(state->rel))));
|
|
goto nextpage;
|
|
}
|
|
else if (nextleveldown.leftmost == InvalidBlockNumber)
|
|
{
|
|
/*
|
|
* A concurrent page split could make the caller supplied leftmost
|
|
* block no longer contain the leftmost page, or no longer be the
|
|
* true root, but where that isn't possible due to heavyweight
|
|
* locking, check that the first valid page meets caller's
|
|
* expectations.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (state->readonly)
|
|
{
|
|
if (!P_LEFTMOST(opaque))
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("block %u is not leftmost in index \"%s\"",
|
|
current, RelationGetRelationName(state->rel))));
|
|
|
|
if (level.istruerootlevel && !P_ISROOT(opaque))
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("block %u is not true root in index \"%s\"",
|
|
current, RelationGetRelationName(state->rel))));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Before beginning any non-trivial examination of level, prepare
|
|
* state for next bt_check_level_from_leftmost() invocation for
|
|
* the next level for the next level down (if any).
|
|
*
|
|
* There should be at least one non-ignorable page per level,
|
|
* unless this is the leaf level, which is assumed by caller to be
|
|
* final level.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (!P_ISLEAF(opaque))
|
|
{
|
|
IndexTuple itup;
|
|
ItemId itemid;
|
|
|
|
/* Internal page -- downlink gets leftmost on next level */
|
|
itemid = PageGetItemId(state->target, P_FIRSTDATAKEY(opaque));
|
|
itup = (IndexTuple) PageGetItem(state->target, itemid);
|
|
nextleveldown.leftmost = BTreeInnerTupleGetDownLink(itup);
|
|
nextleveldown.level = opaque->btpo.level - 1;
|
|
}
|
|
else
|
|
{
|
|
/*
|
|
* Leaf page -- final level caller must process.
|
|
*
|
|
* Note that this could also be the root page, if there has
|
|
* been no root page split yet.
|
|
*/
|
|
nextleveldown.leftmost = P_NONE;
|
|
nextleveldown.level = InvalidBtreeLevel;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Finished setting up state for this call/level. Control will
|
|
* never end up back here in any future loop iteration for this
|
|
* level.
|
|
*/
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* readonly mode can only ever land on live pages and half-dead pages,
|
|
* so sibling pointers should always be in mutual agreement
|
|
*/
|
|
if (state->readonly && opaque->btpo_prev != leftcurrent)
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("left link/right link pair in index \"%s\" not in agreement",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Block=%u left block=%u left link from block=%u.",
|
|
current, leftcurrent, opaque->btpo_prev)));
|
|
|
|
/* Check level, which must be valid for non-ignorable page */
|
|
if (level.level != opaque->btpo.level)
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("leftmost down link for level points to block in index \"%s\" whose level is not one level down",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Block pointed to=%u expected level=%u level in pointed to block=%u.",
|
|
current, level.level, opaque->btpo.level)));
|
|
|
|
/* Verify invariants for page */
|
|
bt_target_page_check(state);
|
|
|
|
nextpage:
|
|
|
|
/* Try to detect circular links */
|
|
if (current == leftcurrent || current == opaque->btpo_prev)
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("circular link chain found in block %u of index \"%s\"",
|
|
current, RelationGetRelationName(state->rel))));
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Record if page that is about to become target is the right half of
|
|
* an incomplete page split. This can go stale immediately in
|
|
* !readonly case.
|
|
*/
|
|
state->rightsplit = P_INCOMPLETE_SPLIT(opaque);
|
|
|
|
leftcurrent = current;
|
|
current = opaque->btpo_next;
|
|
|
|
/* Free page and associated memory for this iteration */
|
|
MemoryContextReset(state->targetcontext);
|
|
}
|
|
while (current != P_NONE);
|
|
|
|
/* Don't change context for caller */
|
|
MemoryContextSwitchTo(oldcontext);
|
|
|
|
return nextleveldown;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Function performs the following checks on target page, or pages ancillary to
|
|
* target page:
|
|
*
|
|
* - That every "real" data item is less than or equal to the high key, which
|
|
* is an upper bound on the items on the pages (where there is a high key at
|
|
* all -- pages that are rightmost lack one).
|
|
*
|
|
* - That within the page, every "real" item is less than or equal to the item
|
|
* immediately to its right, if any (i.e., that the items are in order within
|
|
* the page, so that the binary searches performed by index scans are sane).
|
|
*
|
|
* - That the last item stored on the page is less than or equal to the first
|
|
* "real" data item on the page to the right (if such a first item is
|
|
* available).
|
|
*
|
|
* - That tuples report that they have the expected number of attributes.
|
|
* INCLUDE index pivot tuples should not contain non-key attributes.
|
|
*
|
|
* Furthermore, when state passed shows ShareLock held, function also checks:
|
|
*
|
|
* - That all child pages respect downlinks lower bound.
|
|
*
|
|
* - That downlink to block was encountered in parent where that's expected.
|
|
* (Limited to heapallindexed readonly callers.)
|
|
*
|
|
* This is also where heapallindexed callers use their Bloom filter to
|
|
* fingerprint IndexTuples for later IndexBuildHeapScan() verification.
|
|
*
|
|
* Note: Memory allocated in this routine is expected to be released by caller
|
|
* resetting state->targetcontext.
|
|
*/
|
|
static void
|
|
bt_target_page_check(BtreeCheckState *state)
|
|
{
|
|
OffsetNumber offset;
|
|
OffsetNumber max;
|
|
BTPageOpaque topaque;
|
|
|
|
topaque = (BTPageOpaque) PageGetSpecialPointer(state->target);
|
|
max = PageGetMaxOffsetNumber(state->target);
|
|
|
|
elog(DEBUG2, "verifying %u items on %s block %u", max,
|
|
P_ISLEAF(topaque) ? "leaf" : "internal", state->targetblock);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Check the number of attributes in high key. Note, rightmost page
|
|
* doesn't contain a high key, so nothing to check
|
|
*/
|
|
if (!P_RIGHTMOST(topaque) &&
|
|
!_bt_check_natts(state->rel, state->target, P_HIKEY))
|
|
{
|
|
ItemId itemid;
|
|
IndexTuple itup;
|
|
|
|
itemid = PageGetItemId(state->target, P_HIKEY);
|
|
itup = (IndexTuple) PageGetItem(state->target, itemid);
|
|
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("wrong number of high key index tuple attributes in index \"%s\"",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Index block=%u natts=%u block type=%s page lsn=%X/%X.",
|
|
state->targetblock,
|
|
BTreeTupleGetNAtts(itup, state->rel),
|
|
P_ISLEAF(topaque) ? "heap" : "index",
|
|
(uint32) (state->targetlsn >> 32),
|
|
(uint32) state->targetlsn)));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Loop over page items, starting from first non-highkey item, not high
|
|
* key (if any). Most tests are not performed for the "negative infinity"
|
|
* real item (if any).
|
|
*/
|
|
for (offset = P_FIRSTDATAKEY(topaque);
|
|
offset <= max;
|
|
offset = OffsetNumberNext(offset))
|
|
{
|
|
ItemId itemid;
|
|
IndexTuple itup;
|
|
ScanKey skey;
|
|
size_t tupsize;
|
|
|
|
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS();
|
|
|
|
itemid = PageGetItemId(state->target, offset);
|
|
itup = (IndexTuple) PageGetItem(state->target, itemid);
|
|
tupsize = IndexTupleSize(itup);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* lp_len should match the IndexTuple reported length exactly, since
|
|
* lp_len is completely redundant in indexes, and both sources of
|
|
* tuple length are MAXALIGN()'d. nbtree does not use lp_len all that
|
|
* frequently, and is surprisingly tolerant of corrupt lp_len fields.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (tupsize != ItemIdGetLength(itemid))
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("index tuple size does not equal lp_len in index \"%s\"",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Index tid=(%u,%u) tuple size=%zu lp_len=%u page lsn=%X/%X.",
|
|
state->targetblock, offset,
|
|
tupsize, ItemIdGetLength(itemid),
|
|
(uint32) (state->targetlsn >> 32),
|
|
(uint32) state->targetlsn),
|
|
errhint("This could be a torn page problem.")));
|
|
|
|
/* Check the number of index tuple attributes */
|
|
if (!_bt_check_natts(state->rel, state->target, offset))
|
|
{
|
|
char *itid,
|
|
*htid;
|
|
|
|
itid = psprintf("(%u,%u)", state->targetblock, offset);
|
|
htid = psprintf("(%u,%u)",
|
|
ItemPointerGetBlockNumberNoCheck(&(itup->t_tid)),
|
|
ItemPointerGetOffsetNumberNoCheck(&(itup->t_tid)));
|
|
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("wrong number of index tuple attributes in index \"%s\"",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Index tid=%s natts=%u points to %s tid=%s page lsn=%X/%X.",
|
|
itid,
|
|
BTreeTupleGetNAtts(itup, state->rel),
|
|
P_ISLEAF(topaque) ? "heap" : "index",
|
|
htid,
|
|
(uint32) (state->targetlsn >> 32),
|
|
(uint32) state->targetlsn)));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Fingerprint downlink blocks in heapallindexed + readonly case */
|
|
if (state->heapallindexed && state->readonly && !P_ISLEAF(topaque))
|
|
{
|
|
BlockNumber childblock = BTreeInnerTupleGetDownLink(itup);
|
|
|
|
bloom_add_element(state->downlinkfilter,
|
|
(unsigned char *) &childblock,
|
|
sizeof(BlockNumber));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Don't try to generate scankey using "negative infinity" item on
|
|
* internal pages. They are always truncated to zero attributes.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (offset_is_negative_infinity(topaque, offset))
|
|
continue;
|
|
|
|
/* Build insertion scankey for current page offset */
|
|
skey = _bt_mkscankey(state->rel, itup);
|
|
|
|
/* Fingerprint leaf page tuples (those that point to the heap) */
|
|
if (state->heapallindexed && P_ISLEAF(topaque) && !ItemIdIsDead(itemid))
|
|
bloom_add_element(state->filter, (unsigned char *) itup, tupsize);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* * High key check *
|
|
*
|
|
* If there is a high key (if this is not the rightmost page on its
|
|
* entire level), check that high key actually is upper bound on all
|
|
* page items.
|
|
*
|
|
* We prefer to check all items against high key rather than checking
|
|
* just the last and trusting that the operator class obeys the
|
|
* transitive law (which implies that all previous items also
|
|
* respected the high key invariant if they pass the item order
|
|
* check).
|
|
*
|
|
* Ideally, we'd compare every item in the index against every other
|
|
* item in the index, and not trust opclass obedience of the
|
|
* transitive law to bridge the gap between children and their
|
|
* grandparents (as well as great-grandparents, and so on). We don't
|
|
* go to those lengths because that would be prohibitively expensive,
|
|
* and probably not markedly more effective in practice.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (!P_RIGHTMOST(topaque) &&
|
|
!invariant_leq_offset(state, skey, P_HIKEY))
|
|
{
|
|
char *itid,
|
|
*htid;
|
|
|
|
itid = psprintf("(%u,%u)", state->targetblock, offset);
|
|
htid = psprintf("(%u,%u)",
|
|
ItemPointerGetBlockNumberNoCheck(&(itup->t_tid)),
|
|
ItemPointerGetOffsetNumberNoCheck(&(itup->t_tid)));
|
|
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("high key invariant violated for index \"%s\"",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Index tid=%s points to %s tid=%s page lsn=%X/%X.",
|
|
itid,
|
|
P_ISLEAF(topaque) ? "heap" : "index",
|
|
htid,
|
|
(uint32) (state->targetlsn >> 32),
|
|
(uint32) state->targetlsn)));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* * Item order check *
|
|
*
|
|
* Check that items are stored on page in logical order, by checking
|
|
* current item is less than or equal to next item (if any).
|
|
*/
|
|
if (OffsetNumberNext(offset) <= max &&
|
|
!invariant_leq_offset(state, skey,
|
|
OffsetNumberNext(offset)))
|
|
{
|
|
char *itid,
|
|
*htid,
|
|
*nitid,
|
|
*nhtid;
|
|
|
|
itid = psprintf("(%u,%u)", state->targetblock, offset);
|
|
htid = psprintf("(%u,%u)",
|
|
ItemPointerGetBlockNumberNoCheck(&(itup->t_tid)),
|
|
ItemPointerGetOffsetNumberNoCheck(&(itup->t_tid)));
|
|
nitid = psprintf("(%u,%u)", state->targetblock,
|
|
OffsetNumberNext(offset));
|
|
|
|
/* Reuse itup to get pointed-to heap location of second item */
|
|
itemid = PageGetItemId(state->target, OffsetNumberNext(offset));
|
|
itup = (IndexTuple) PageGetItem(state->target, itemid);
|
|
nhtid = psprintf("(%u,%u)",
|
|
ItemPointerGetBlockNumberNoCheck(&(itup->t_tid)),
|
|
ItemPointerGetOffsetNumberNoCheck(&(itup->t_tid)));
|
|
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("item order invariant violated for index \"%s\"",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Lower index tid=%s (points to %s tid=%s) "
|
|
"higher index tid=%s (points to %s tid=%s) "
|
|
"page lsn=%X/%X.",
|
|
itid,
|
|
P_ISLEAF(topaque) ? "heap" : "index",
|
|
htid,
|
|
nitid,
|
|
P_ISLEAF(topaque) ? "heap" : "index",
|
|
nhtid,
|
|
(uint32) (state->targetlsn >> 32),
|
|
(uint32) state->targetlsn)));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* * Last item check *
|
|
*
|
|
* Check last item against next/right page's first data item's when
|
|
* last item on page is reached. This additional check will detect
|
|
* transposed pages iff the supposed right sibling page happens to
|
|
* belong before target in the key space. (Otherwise, a subsequent
|
|
* heap verification will probably detect the problem.)
|
|
*
|
|
* This check is similar to the item order check that will have
|
|
* already been performed for every other "real" item on target page
|
|
* when last item is checked. The difference is that the next item
|
|
* (the item that is compared to target's last item) needs to come
|
|
* from the next/sibling page. There may not be such an item
|
|
* available from sibling for various reasons, though (e.g., target is
|
|
* the rightmost page on level).
|
|
*/
|
|
else if (offset == max)
|
|
{
|
|
ScanKey rightkey;
|
|
|
|
/* Get item in next/right page */
|
|
rightkey = bt_right_page_check_scankey(state);
|
|
|
|
if (rightkey &&
|
|
!invariant_geq_offset(state, rightkey, max))
|
|
{
|
|
/*
|
|
* As explained at length in bt_right_page_check_scankey(),
|
|
* there is a known !readonly race that could account for
|
|
* apparent violation of invariant, which we must check for
|
|
* before actually proceeding with raising error. Our canary
|
|
* condition is that target page was deleted.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (!state->readonly)
|
|
{
|
|
/* Get fresh copy of target page */
|
|
state->target = palloc_btree_page(state, state->targetblock);
|
|
/* Note that we deliberately do not update target LSN */
|
|
topaque = (BTPageOpaque) PageGetSpecialPointer(state->target);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* All !readonly checks now performed; just return
|
|
*/
|
|
if (P_IGNORE(topaque))
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("cross page item order invariant violated for index \"%s\"",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Last item on page tid=(%u,%u) page lsn=%X/%X.",
|
|
state->targetblock, offset,
|
|
(uint32) (state->targetlsn >> 32),
|
|
(uint32) state->targetlsn)));
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* * Downlink check *
|
|
*
|
|
* Additional check of child items iff this is an internal page and
|
|
* caller holds a ShareLock. This happens for every downlink (item)
|
|
* in target excluding the negative-infinity downlink (again, this is
|
|
* because it has no useful value to compare).
|
|
*/
|
|
if (!P_ISLEAF(topaque) && state->readonly)
|
|
{
|
|
BlockNumber childblock = BTreeInnerTupleGetDownLink(itup);
|
|
|
|
bt_downlink_check(state, childblock, skey);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* * Check if page has a downlink in parent *
|
|
*
|
|
* This can only be checked in heapallindexed + readonly case.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (state->heapallindexed && state->readonly)
|
|
bt_downlink_missing_check(state);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Return a scankey for an item on page to right of current target (or the
|
|
* first non-ignorable page), sufficient to check ordering invariant on last
|
|
* item in current target page. Returned scankey relies on local memory
|
|
* allocated for the child page, which caller cannot pfree(). Caller's memory
|
|
* context should be reset between calls here.
|
|
*
|
|
* This is the first data item, and so all adjacent items are checked against
|
|
* their immediate sibling item (which may be on a sibling page, or even a
|
|
* "cousin" page at parent boundaries where target's rightlink points to page
|
|
* with different parent page). If no such valid item is available, return
|
|
* NULL instead.
|
|
*
|
|
* Note that !readonly callers must reverify that target page has not
|
|
* been concurrently deleted.
|
|
*/
|
|
static ScanKey
|
|
bt_right_page_check_scankey(BtreeCheckState *state)
|
|
{
|
|
BTPageOpaque opaque;
|
|
ItemId rightitem;
|
|
BlockNumber targetnext;
|
|
Page rightpage;
|
|
OffsetNumber nline;
|
|
|
|
/* Determine target's next block number */
|
|
opaque = (BTPageOpaque) PageGetSpecialPointer(state->target);
|
|
|
|
/* If target is already rightmost, no right sibling; nothing to do here */
|
|
if (P_RIGHTMOST(opaque))
|
|
return NULL;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* General notes on concurrent page splits and page deletion:
|
|
*
|
|
* Routines like _bt_search() don't require *any* page split interlock
|
|
* when descending the tree, including something very light like a buffer
|
|
* pin. That's why it's okay that we don't either. This avoidance of any
|
|
* need to "couple" buffer locks is the raison d' etre of the Lehman & Yao
|
|
* algorithm, in fact.
|
|
*
|
|
* That leaves deletion. A deleted page won't actually be recycled by
|
|
* VACUUM early enough for us to fail to at least follow its right link
|
|
* (or left link, or downlink) and find its sibling, because recycling
|
|
* does not occur until no possible index scan could land on the page.
|
|
* Index scans can follow links with nothing more than their snapshot as
|
|
* an interlock and be sure of at least that much. (See page
|
|
* recycling/RecentGlobalXmin notes in nbtree README.)
|
|
*
|
|
* Furthermore, it's okay if we follow a rightlink and find a half-dead or
|
|
* dead (ignorable) page one or more times. There will either be a
|
|
* further right link to follow that leads to a live page before too long
|
|
* (before passing by parent's rightmost child), or we will find the end
|
|
* of the entire level instead (possible when parent page is itself the
|
|
* rightmost on its level).
|
|
*/
|
|
targetnext = opaque->btpo_next;
|
|
for (;;)
|
|
{
|
|
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS();
|
|
|
|
rightpage = palloc_btree_page(state, targetnext);
|
|
opaque = (BTPageOpaque) PageGetSpecialPointer(rightpage);
|
|
|
|
if (!P_IGNORE(opaque) || P_RIGHTMOST(opaque))
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
/* We landed on a deleted page, so step right to find a live page */
|
|
targetnext = opaque->btpo_next;
|
|
ereport(DEBUG1,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_NO_DATA),
|
|
errmsg("level %u leftmost page of index \"%s\" was found deleted or half dead",
|
|
opaque->btpo.level, RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Deleted page found when building scankey from right sibling.")));
|
|
|
|
/* Be slightly more pro-active in freeing this memory, just in case */
|
|
pfree(rightpage);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* No ShareLock held case -- why it's safe to proceed.
|
|
*
|
|
* Problem:
|
|
*
|
|
* We must avoid false positive reports of corruption when caller treats
|
|
* item returned here as an upper bound on target's last item. In
|
|
* general, false positives are disallowed. Avoiding them here when
|
|
* caller is !readonly is subtle.
|
|
*
|
|
* A concurrent page deletion by VACUUM of the target page can result in
|
|
* the insertion of items on to this right sibling page that would
|
|
* previously have been inserted on our target page. There might have
|
|
* been insertions that followed the target's downlink after it was made
|
|
* to point to right sibling instead of target by page deletion's first
|
|
* phase. The inserters insert items that would belong on target page.
|
|
* This race is very tight, but it's possible. This is our only problem.
|
|
*
|
|
* Non-problems:
|
|
*
|
|
* We are not hindered by a concurrent page split of the target; we'll
|
|
* never land on the second half of the page anyway. A concurrent split
|
|
* of the right page will also not matter, because the first data item
|
|
* remains the same within the left half, which we'll reliably land on. If
|
|
* we had to skip over ignorable/deleted pages, it cannot matter because
|
|
* their key space has already been atomically merged with the first
|
|
* non-ignorable page we eventually find (doesn't matter whether the page
|
|
* we eventually find is a true sibling or a cousin of target, which we go
|
|
* into below).
|
|
*
|
|
* Solution:
|
|
*
|
|
* Caller knows that it should reverify that target is not ignorable
|
|
* (half-dead or deleted) when cross-page sibling item comparison appears
|
|
* to indicate corruption (invariant fails). This detects the single race
|
|
* condition that exists for caller. This is correct because the
|
|
* continued existence of target block as non-ignorable (not half-dead or
|
|
* deleted) implies that target page was not merged into from the right by
|
|
* deletion; the key space at or after target never moved left. Target's
|
|
* parent either has the same downlink to target as before, or a <=
|
|
* downlink due to deletion at the left of target. Target either has the
|
|
* same highkey as before, or a highkey <= before when there is a page
|
|
* split. (The rightmost concurrently-split-from-target-page page will
|
|
* still have the same highkey as target was originally found to have,
|
|
* which for our purposes is equivalent to target's highkey itself never
|
|
* changing, since we reliably skip over
|
|
* concurrently-split-from-target-page pages.)
|
|
*
|
|
* In simpler terms, we allow that the key space of the target may expand
|
|
* left (the key space can move left on the left side of target only), but
|
|
* the target key space cannot expand right and get ahead of us without
|
|
* our detecting it. The key space of the target cannot shrink, unless it
|
|
* shrinks to zero due to the deletion of the original page, our canary
|
|
* condition. (To be very precise, we're a bit stricter than that because
|
|
* it might just have been that the target page split and only the
|
|
* original target page was deleted. We can be more strict, just not more
|
|
* lax.)
|
|
*
|
|
* Top level tree walk caller moves on to next page (makes it the new
|
|
* target) following recovery from this race. (cf. The rationale for
|
|
* child/downlink verification needing a ShareLock within
|
|
* bt_downlink_check(), where page deletion is also the main source of
|
|
* trouble.)
|
|
*
|
|
* Note that it doesn't matter if right sibling page here is actually a
|
|
* cousin page, because in order for the key space to be readjusted in a
|
|
* way that causes us issues in next level up (guiding problematic
|
|
* concurrent insertions to the cousin from the grandparent rather than to
|
|
* the sibling from the parent), there'd have to be page deletion of
|
|
* target's parent page (affecting target's parent's downlink in target's
|
|
* grandparent page). Internal page deletion only occurs when there are
|
|
* no child pages (they were all fully deleted), and caller is checking
|
|
* that the target's parent has at least one non-deleted (so
|
|
* non-ignorable) child: the target page. (Note that the first phase of
|
|
* deletion atomically marks the page to be deleted half-dead/ignorable at
|
|
* the same time downlink in its parent is removed, so caller will
|
|
* definitely not fail to detect that this happened.)
|
|
*
|
|
* This trick is inspired by the method backward scans use for dealing
|
|
* with concurrent page splits; concurrent page deletion is a problem that
|
|
* similarly receives special consideration sometimes (it's possible that
|
|
* the backwards scan will re-read its "original" block after failing to
|
|
* find a right-link to it, having already moved in the opposite direction
|
|
* (right/"forwards") a few times to try to locate one). Just like us,
|
|
* that happens only to determine if there was a concurrent page deletion
|
|
* of a reference page, and just like us if there was a page deletion of
|
|
* that reference page it means we can move on from caring about the
|
|
* reference page. See the nbtree README for a full description of how
|
|
* that works.
|
|
*/
|
|
nline = PageGetMaxOffsetNumber(rightpage);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Get first data item, if any
|
|
*/
|
|
if (P_ISLEAF(opaque) && nline >= P_FIRSTDATAKEY(opaque))
|
|
{
|
|
/* Return first data item (if any) */
|
|
rightitem = PageGetItemId(rightpage, P_FIRSTDATAKEY(opaque));
|
|
}
|
|
else if (!P_ISLEAF(opaque) &&
|
|
nline >= OffsetNumberNext(P_FIRSTDATAKEY(opaque)))
|
|
{
|
|
/*
|
|
* Return first item after the internal page's "negative infinity"
|
|
* item
|
|
*/
|
|
rightitem = PageGetItemId(rightpage,
|
|
OffsetNumberNext(P_FIRSTDATAKEY(opaque)));
|
|
}
|
|
else
|
|
{
|
|
/*
|
|
* No first item. Page is probably empty leaf page, but it's also
|
|
* possible that it's an internal page with only a negative infinity
|
|
* item.
|
|
*/
|
|
ereport(DEBUG1,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_NO_DATA),
|
|
errmsg("%s block %u of index \"%s\" has no first data item",
|
|
P_ISLEAF(opaque) ? "leaf" : "internal", targetnext,
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel))));
|
|
return NULL;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Return first real item scankey. Note that this relies on right page
|
|
* memory remaining allocated.
|
|
*/
|
|
return _bt_mkscankey(state->rel,
|
|
(IndexTuple) PageGetItem(rightpage, rightitem));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Checks one of target's downlink against its child page.
|
|
*
|
|
* Conceptually, the target page continues to be what is checked here. The
|
|
* target block is still blamed in the event of finding an invariant violation.
|
|
* The downlink insertion into the target is probably where any problem raised
|
|
* here arises, and there is no such thing as a parent link, so doing the
|
|
* verification this way around is much more practical.
|
|
*/
|
|
static void
|
|
bt_downlink_check(BtreeCheckState *state, BlockNumber childblock,
|
|
ScanKey targetkey)
|
|
{
|
|
OffsetNumber offset;
|
|
OffsetNumber maxoffset;
|
|
Page child;
|
|
BTPageOpaque copaque;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Caller must have ShareLock on target relation, because of
|
|
* considerations around page deletion by VACUUM.
|
|
*
|
|
* NB: In general, page deletion deletes the right sibling's downlink, not
|
|
* the downlink of the page being deleted; the deleted page's downlink is
|
|
* reused for its sibling. The key space is thereby consolidated between
|
|
* the deleted page and its right sibling. (We cannot delete a parent
|
|
* page's rightmost child unless it is the last child page, and we intend
|
|
* to also delete the parent itself.)
|
|
*
|
|
* If this verification happened without a ShareLock, the following race
|
|
* condition could cause false positives:
|
|
*
|
|
* In general, concurrent page deletion might occur, including deletion of
|
|
* the left sibling of the child page that is examined here. If such a
|
|
* page deletion were to occur, closely followed by an insertion into the
|
|
* newly expanded key space of the child, a window for the false positive
|
|
* opens up: the stale parent/target downlink originally followed to get
|
|
* to the child legitimately ceases to be a lower bound on all items in
|
|
* the page, since the key space was concurrently expanded "left".
|
|
* (Insertion followed the "new" downlink for the child, not our now-stale
|
|
* downlink, which was concurrently physically removed in target/parent as
|
|
* part of deletion's first phase.)
|
|
*
|
|
* Note that while the cross-page-same-level last item check uses a trick
|
|
* that allows it to perform verification for !readonly callers, a similar
|
|
* trick seems difficult here. The trick that that other check uses is,
|
|
* in essence, to lock down race conditions to those that occur due to
|
|
* concurrent page deletion of the target; that's a race that can be
|
|
* reliably detected before actually reporting corruption.
|
|
*
|
|
* On the other hand, we'd need to lock down race conditions involving
|
|
* deletion of child's left page, for long enough to read the child page
|
|
* into memory (in other words, a scheme with concurrently held buffer
|
|
* locks on both child and left-of-child pages). That's unacceptable for
|
|
* amcheck functions on general principle, though.
|
|
*/
|
|
Assert(state->readonly);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Verify child page has the downlink key from target page (its parent) as
|
|
* a lower bound.
|
|
*
|
|
* Check all items, rather than checking just the first and trusting that
|
|
* the operator class obeys the transitive law.
|
|
*/
|
|
child = palloc_btree_page(state, childblock);
|
|
copaque = (BTPageOpaque) PageGetSpecialPointer(child);
|
|
maxoffset = PageGetMaxOffsetNumber(child);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Since there cannot be a concurrent VACUUM operation in readonly mode,
|
|
* and since a page has no links within other pages (siblings and parent)
|
|
* once it is marked fully deleted, it should be impossible to land on a
|
|
* fully deleted page.
|
|
*
|
|
* It does not quite make sense to enforce that the page cannot even be
|
|
* half-dead, despite the fact the downlink is modified at the same stage
|
|
* that the child leaf page is marked half-dead. That's incorrect because
|
|
* there may occasionally be multiple downlinks from a chain of pages
|
|
* undergoing deletion, where multiple successive calls are made to
|
|
* _bt_unlink_halfdead_page() by VACUUM before it can finally safely mark
|
|
* the leaf page as fully dead. While _bt_mark_page_halfdead() usually
|
|
* removes the downlink to the leaf page that is marked half-dead, that's
|
|
* not guaranteed, so it's possible we'll land on a half-dead page with a
|
|
* downlink due to an interrupted multi-level page deletion.
|
|
*
|
|
* We go ahead with our checks if the child page is half-dead. It's safe
|
|
* to do so because we do not test the child's high key, so it does not
|
|
* matter that the original high key will have been replaced by a dummy
|
|
* truncated high key within _bt_mark_page_halfdead(). All other page
|
|
* items are left intact on a half-dead page, so there is still something
|
|
* to test.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (P_ISDELETED(copaque))
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("downlink to deleted page found in index \"%s\"",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Parent block=%u child block=%u parent page lsn=%X/%X.",
|
|
state->targetblock, childblock,
|
|
(uint32) (state->targetlsn >> 32),
|
|
(uint32) state->targetlsn)));
|
|
|
|
for (offset = P_FIRSTDATAKEY(copaque);
|
|
offset <= maxoffset;
|
|
offset = OffsetNumberNext(offset))
|
|
{
|
|
/*
|
|
* Skip comparison of target page key against "negative infinity"
|
|
* item, if any. Checking it would indicate that it's not an upper
|
|
* bound, but that's only because of the hard-coding within
|
|
* _bt_compare().
|
|
*/
|
|
if (offset_is_negative_infinity(copaque, offset))
|
|
continue;
|
|
|
|
if (!invariant_leq_nontarget_offset(state, child,
|
|
targetkey, offset))
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("down-link lower bound invariant violated for index \"%s\"",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Parent block=%u child index tid=(%u,%u) parent page lsn=%X/%X.",
|
|
state->targetblock, childblock, offset,
|
|
(uint32) (state->targetlsn >> 32),
|
|
(uint32) state->targetlsn)));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
pfree(child);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Checks if page is missing a downlink that it should have.
|
|
*
|
|
* A page that lacks a downlink/parent may indicate corruption. However, we
|
|
* must account for the fact that a missing downlink can occasionally be
|
|
* encountered in a non-corrupt index. This can be due to an interrupted page
|
|
* split, or an interrupted multi-level page deletion (i.e. there was a hard
|
|
* crash or an error during a page split, or while VACUUM was deleting a
|
|
* multi-level chain of pages).
|
|
*
|
|
* Note that this can only be called in readonly mode, so there is no need to
|
|
* be concerned about concurrent page splits or page deletions.
|
|
*/
|
|
static void
|
|
bt_downlink_missing_check(BtreeCheckState *state)
|
|
{
|
|
BTPageOpaque topaque = (BTPageOpaque) PageGetSpecialPointer(state->target);
|
|
ItemId itemid;
|
|
IndexTuple itup;
|
|
Page child;
|
|
BTPageOpaque copaque;
|
|
uint32 level;
|
|
BlockNumber childblk;
|
|
|
|
Assert(state->heapallindexed && state->readonly);
|
|
Assert(!P_IGNORE(topaque));
|
|
|
|
/* No next level up with downlinks to fingerprint from the true root */
|
|
if (P_ISROOT(topaque))
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Incomplete (interrupted) page splits can account for the lack of a
|
|
* downlink. Some inserting transaction should eventually complete the
|
|
* page split in passing, when it notices that the left sibling page is
|
|
* P_INCOMPLETE_SPLIT().
|
|
*
|
|
* In general, VACUUM is not prepared for there to be no downlink to a
|
|
* page that it deletes. This is the main reason why the lack of a
|
|
* downlink can be reported as corruption here. It's not obvious that an
|
|
* invalid missing downlink can result in wrong answers to queries,
|
|
* though, since index scans that land on the child may end up
|
|
* consistently moving right. The handling of concurrent page splits (and
|
|
* page deletions) within _bt_moveright() cannot distinguish
|
|
* inconsistencies that last for a moment from inconsistencies that are
|
|
* permanent and irrecoverable.
|
|
*
|
|
* VACUUM isn't even prepared to delete pages that have no downlink due to
|
|
* an incomplete page split, but it can detect and reason about that case
|
|
* by design, so it shouldn't be taken to indicate corruption. See
|
|
* _bt_pagedel() for full details.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (state->rightsplit)
|
|
{
|
|
ereport(DEBUG1,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_NO_DATA),
|
|
errmsg("harmless interrupted page split detected in index %s",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Block=%u level=%u left sibling=%u page lsn=%X/%X.",
|
|
state->targetblock, topaque->btpo.level,
|
|
topaque->btpo_prev,
|
|
(uint32) (state->targetlsn >> 32),
|
|
(uint32) state->targetlsn)));
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* Target's downlink is typically present in parent/fingerprinted */
|
|
if (!bloom_lacks_element(state->downlinkfilter,
|
|
(unsigned char *) &state->targetblock,
|
|
sizeof(BlockNumber)))
|
|
return;
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Target is probably the "top parent" of a multi-level page deletion.
|
|
* We'll need to descend the subtree to make sure that descendant pages
|
|
* are consistent with that, though.
|
|
*
|
|
* If the target page (which must be non-ignorable) is a leaf page, then
|
|
* clearly it can't be the top parent. The lack of a downlink is probably
|
|
* a symptom of a broad problem that could just as easily cause
|
|
* inconsistencies anywhere else.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (P_ISLEAF(topaque))
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("leaf index block lacks downlink in index \"%s\"",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Block=%u page lsn=%X/%X.",
|
|
state->targetblock,
|
|
(uint32) (state->targetlsn >> 32),
|
|
(uint32) state->targetlsn)));
|
|
|
|
/* Descend from the target page, which is an internal page */
|
|
elog(DEBUG1, "checking for interrupted multi-level deletion due to missing downlink in index \"%s\"",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel));
|
|
|
|
level = topaque->btpo.level;
|
|
itemid = PageGetItemId(state->target, P_FIRSTDATAKEY(topaque));
|
|
itup = (IndexTuple) PageGetItem(state->target, itemid);
|
|
childblk = BTreeInnerTupleGetDownLink(itup);
|
|
for (;;)
|
|
{
|
|
CHECK_FOR_INTERRUPTS();
|
|
|
|
child = palloc_btree_page(state, childblk);
|
|
copaque = (BTPageOpaque) PageGetSpecialPointer(child);
|
|
|
|
if (P_ISLEAF(copaque))
|
|
break;
|
|
|
|
/* Do an extra sanity check in passing on internal pages */
|
|
if (copaque->btpo.level != level - 1)
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg_internal("downlink points to block in index \"%s\" whose level is not one level down",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Top parent/target block=%u block pointed to=%u expected level=%u level in pointed to block=%u.",
|
|
state->targetblock, childblk,
|
|
level - 1, copaque->btpo.level)));
|
|
|
|
level = copaque->btpo.level;
|
|
itemid = PageGetItemId(child, P_FIRSTDATAKEY(copaque));
|
|
itup = (IndexTuple) PageGetItem(child, itemid);
|
|
childblk = BTreeInnerTupleGetDownLink(itup);
|
|
/* Be slightly more pro-active in freeing this memory, just in case */
|
|
pfree(child);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Since there cannot be a concurrent VACUUM operation in readonly mode,
|
|
* and since a page has no links within other pages (siblings and parent)
|
|
* once it is marked fully deleted, it should be impossible to land on a
|
|
* fully deleted page. See bt_downlink_check() for further details.
|
|
*
|
|
* The bt_downlink_check() P_ISDELETED() check is repeated here because
|
|
* bt_downlink_check() does not visit pages reachable through negative
|
|
* infinity items. Besides, bt_downlink_check() is unwilling to descend
|
|
* multiple levels. (The similar bt_downlink_check() P_ISDELETED() check
|
|
* within bt_check_level_from_leftmost() won't reach the page either,
|
|
* since the leaf's live siblings should have their sibling links updated
|
|
* to bypass the deletion target page when it is marked fully dead.)
|
|
*
|
|
* If this error is raised, it might be due to a previous multi-level page
|
|
* deletion that failed to realize that it wasn't yet safe to mark the
|
|
* leaf page as fully dead. A "dangling downlink" will still remain when
|
|
* this happens. The fact that the dangling downlink's page (the leaf's
|
|
* parent/ancestor page) lacked a downlink is incidental.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (P_ISDELETED(copaque))
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg_internal("downlink to deleted leaf page found in index \"%s\"",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Top parent/target block=%u leaf block=%u top parent/target lsn=%X/%X.",
|
|
state->targetblock, childblk,
|
|
(uint32) (state->targetlsn >> 32),
|
|
(uint32) state->targetlsn)));
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Iff leaf page is half-dead, its high key top parent link should point
|
|
* to what VACUUM considered to be the top parent page at the instant it
|
|
* was interrupted. Provided the high key link actually points to the
|
|
* target page, the missing downlink we detected is consistent with there
|
|
* having been an interrupted multi-level page deletion. This means that
|
|
* the subtree with the target page at its root (a page deletion chain) is
|
|
* in a consistent state, enabling VACUUM to resume deleting the entire
|
|
* chain the next time it encounters the half-dead leaf page.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (P_ISHALFDEAD(copaque) && !P_RIGHTMOST(copaque))
|
|
{
|
|
itemid = PageGetItemId(child, P_HIKEY);
|
|
itup = (IndexTuple) PageGetItem(child, itemid);
|
|
if (BTreeTupleGetTopParent(itup) == state->targetblock)
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("internal index block lacks downlink in index \"%s\"",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errdetail_internal("Block=%u level=%u page lsn=%X/%X.",
|
|
state->targetblock, topaque->btpo.level,
|
|
(uint32) (state->targetlsn >> 32),
|
|
(uint32) state->targetlsn)));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Per-tuple callback from IndexBuildHeapScan, used to determine if index has
|
|
* all the entries that definitely should have been observed in leaf pages of
|
|
* the target index (that is, all IndexTuples that were fingerprinted by our
|
|
* Bloom filter). All heapallindexed checks occur here.
|
|
*
|
|
* The redundancy between an index and the table it indexes provides a good
|
|
* opportunity to detect corruption, especially corruption within the table.
|
|
* The high level principle behind the verification performed here is that any
|
|
* IndexTuple that should be in an index following a fresh CREATE INDEX (based
|
|
* on the same index definition) should also have been in the original,
|
|
* existing index, which should have used exactly the same representation
|
|
*
|
|
* Since the overall structure of the index has already been verified, the most
|
|
* likely explanation for error here is a corrupt heap page (could be logical
|
|
* or physical corruption). Index corruption may still be detected here,
|
|
* though. Only readonly callers will have verified that left links and right
|
|
* links are in agreement, and so it's possible that a leaf page transposition
|
|
* within index is actually the source of corruption detected here (for
|
|
* !readonly callers). The checks performed only for readonly callers might
|
|
* more accurately frame the problem as a cross-page invariant issue (this
|
|
* could even be due to recovery not replaying all WAL records). The !readonly
|
|
* ERROR message raised here includes a HINT about retrying with readonly
|
|
* verification, just in case it's a cross-page invariant issue, though that
|
|
* isn't particularly likely.
|
|
*
|
|
* IndexBuildHeapScan() expects to be able to find the root tuple when a
|
|
* heap-only tuple (the live tuple at the end of some HOT chain) needs to be
|
|
* indexed, in order to replace the actual tuple's TID with the root tuple's
|
|
* TID (which is what we're actually passed back here). The index build heap
|
|
* scan code will raise an error when a tuple that claims to be the root of the
|
|
* heap-only tuple's HOT chain cannot be located. This catches cases where the
|
|
* original root item offset/root tuple for a HOT chain indicates (for whatever
|
|
* reason) that the entire HOT chain is dead, despite the fact that the latest
|
|
* heap-only tuple should be indexed. When this happens, sequential scans may
|
|
* always give correct answers, and all indexes may be considered structurally
|
|
* consistent (i.e. the nbtree structural checks would not detect corruption).
|
|
* It may be the case that only index scans give wrong answers, and yet heap or
|
|
* SLRU corruption is the real culprit. (While it's true that LP_DEAD bit
|
|
* setting will probably also leave the index in a corrupt state before too
|
|
* long, the problem is nonetheless that there is heap corruption.)
|
|
*
|
|
* Heap-only tuple handling within IndexBuildHeapScan() works in a way that
|
|
* helps us to detect index tuples that contain the wrong values (values that
|
|
* don't match the latest tuple in the HOT chain). This can happen when there
|
|
* is no superseding index tuple due to a faulty assessment of HOT safety,
|
|
* perhaps during the original CREATE INDEX. Because the latest tuple's
|
|
* contents are used with the root TID, an error will be raised when a tuple
|
|
* with the same TID but non-matching attribute values is passed back to us.
|
|
* Faulty assessment of HOT-safety was behind at least two distinct CREATE
|
|
* INDEX CONCURRENTLY bugs that made it into stable releases, one of which was
|
|
* undetected for many years. In short, the same principle that allows a
|
|
* REINDEX to repair corruption when there was an (undetected) broken HOT chain
|
|
* also allows us to detect the corruption in many cases.
|
|
*/
|
|
static void
|
|
bt_tuple_present_callback(Relation index, HeapTuple htup, Datum *values,
|
|
bool *isnull, bool tupleIsAlive, void *checkstate)
|
|
{
|
|
BtreeCheckState *state = (BtreeCheckState *) checkstate;
|
|
IndexTuple itup;
|
|
|
|
Assert(state->heapallindexed);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Generate an index tuple for fingerprinting.
|
|
*
|
|
* Index tuple formation is assumed to be deterministic, and IndexTuples
|
|
* are assumed immutable. While the LP_DEAD bit is mutable in leaf pages,
|
|
* that's ItemId metadata, which was not fingerprinted. (There will often
|
|
* be some dead-to-everyone IndexTuples fingerprinted by the Bloom filter,
|
|
* but we only try to detect the absence of needed tuples, so that's
|
|
* okay.)
|
|
*
|
|
* Note that we rely on deterministic index_form_tuple() TOAST
|
|
* compression. If index_form_tuple() was ever enhanced to compress datums
|
|
* out-of-line, or otherwise varied when or how compression was applied,
|
|
* our assumption would break, leading to false positive reports of
|
|
* corruption. It's also possible that non-pivot tuples could in the
|
|
* future have alternative equivalent representations (e.g. by using the
|
|
* INDEX_ALT_TID_MASK bit). For now, we don't decompress/normalize toasted
|
|
* values as part of fingerprinting.
|
|
*/
|
|
itup = index_form_tuple(RelationGetDescr(index), values, isnull);
|
|
itup->t_tid = htup->t_self;
|
|
|
|
/* Probe Bloom filter -- tuple should be present */
|
|
if (bloom_lacks_element(state->filter, (unsigned char *) itup,
|
|
IndexTupleSize(itup)))
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_DATA_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("heap tuple (%u,%u) from table \"%s\" lacks matching index tuple within index \"%s\"",
|
|
ItemPointerGetBlockNumber(&(itup->t_tid)),
|
|
ItemPointerGetOffsetNumber(&(itup->t_tid)),
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->heaprel),
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
!state->readonly
|
|
? errhint("Retrying verification using the function bt_index_parent_check() might provide a more specific error.")
|
|
: 0));
|
|
|
|
state->heaptuplespresent++;
|
|
pfree(itup);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Is particular offset within page (whose special state is passed by caller)
|
|
* the page negative-infinity item?
|
|
*
|
|
* As noted in comments above _bt_compare(), there is special handling of the
|
|
* first data item as a "negative infinity" item. The hard-coding within
|
|
* _bt_compare() makes comparing this item for the purposes of verification
|
|
* pointless at best, since the IndexTuple only contains a valid TID (a
|
|
* reference TID to child page).
|
|
*/
|
|
static inline bool
|
|
offset_is_negative_infinity(BTPageOpaque opaque, OffsetNumber offset)
|
|
{
|
|
/*
|
|
* For internal pages only, the first item after high key, if any, is
|
|
* negative infinity item. Internal pages always have a negative infinity
|
|
* item, whereas leaf pages never have one. This implies that negative
|
|
* infinity item is either first or second line item, or there is none
|
|
* within page.
|
|
*
|
|
* Negative infinity items are a special case among pivot tuples. They
|
|
* always have zero attributes, while all other pivot tuples always have
|
|
* nkeyatts attributes.
|
|
*
|
|
* Right-most pages don't have a high key, but could be said to
|
|
* conceptually have a "positive infinity" high key. Thus, there is a
|
|
* symmetry between down link items in parent pages, and high keys in
|
|
* children. Together, they represent the part of the key space that
|
|
* belongs to each page in the index. For example, all children of the
|
|
* root page will have negative infinity as a lower bound from root
|
|
* negative infinity downlink, and positive infinity as an upper bound
|
|
* (implicitly, from "imaginary" positive infinity high key in root).
|
|
*/
|
|
return !P_ISLEAF(opaque) && offset == P_FIRSTDATAKEY(opaque);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Does the invariant hold that the key is less than or equal to a given upper
|
|
* bound offset item?
|
|
*
|
|
* If this function returns false, convention is that caller throws error due
|
|
* to corruption.
|
|
*/
|
|
static inline bool
|
|
invariant_leq_offset(BtreeCheckState *state, ScanKey key,
|
|
OffsetNumber upperbound)
|
|
{
|
|
int16 nkeyatts = IndexRelationGetNumberOfKeyAttributes(state->rel);
|
|
int32 cmp;
|
|
|
|
cmp = _bt_compare(state->rel, nkeyatts, key, state->target, upperbound);
|
|
|
|
return cmp <= 0;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Does the invariant hold that the key is greater than or equal to a given
|
|
* lower bound offset item?
|
|
*
|
|
* If this function returns false, convention is that caller throws error due
|
|
* to corruption.
|
|
*/
|
|
static inline bool
|
|
invariant_geq_offset(BtreeCheckState *state, ScanKey key,
|
|
OffsetNumber lowerbound)
|
|
{
|
|
int16 nkeyatts = IndexRelationGetNumberOfKeyAttributes(state->rel);
|
|
int32 cmp;
|
|
|
|
cmp = _bt_compare(state->rel, nkeyatts, key, state->target, lowerbound);
|
|
|
|
return cmp >= 0;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Does the invariant hold that the key is less than or equal to a given upper
|
|
* bound offset item, with the offset relating to a caller-supplied page that
|
|
* is not the current target page? Caller's non-target page is typically a
|
|
* child page of the target, checked as part of checking a property of the
|
|
* target page (i.e. the key comes from the target).
|
|
*
|
|
* If this function returns false, convention is that caller throws error due
|
|
* to corruption.
|
|
*/
|
|
static inline bool
|
|
invariant_leq_nontarget_offset(BtreeCheckState *state,
|
|
Page nontarget, ScanKey key,
|
|
OffsetNumber upperbound)
|
|
{
|
|
int16 nkeyatts = IndexRelationGetNumberOfKeyAttributes(state->rel);
|
|
int32 cmp;
|
|
|
|
cmp = _bt_compare(state->rel, nkeyatts, key, nontarget, upperbound);
|
|
|
|
return cmp <= 0;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Given a block number of a B-Tree page, return page in palloc()'d memory.
|
|
* While at it, perform some basic checks of the page.
|
|
*
|
|
* There is never an attempt to get a consistent view of multiple pages using
|
|
* multiple concurrent buffer locks; in general, we only acquire a single pin
|
|
* and buffer lock at a time, which is often all that the nbtree code requires.
|
|
*
|
|
* Operating on a copy of the page is useful because it prevents control
|
|
* getting stuck in an uninterruptible state when an underlying operator class
|
|
* misbehaves.
|
|
*/
|
|
static Page
|
|
palloc_btree_page(BtreeCheckState *state, BlockNumber blocknum)
|
|
{
|
|
Buffer buffer;
|
|
Page page;
|
|
BTPageOpaque opaque;
|
|
OffsetNumber maxoffset;
|
|
|
|
page = palloc(BLCKSZ);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* We copy the page into local storage to avoid holding pin on the buffer
|
|
* longer than we must.
|
|
*/
|
|
buffer = ReadBufferExtended(state->rel, MAIN_FORKNUM, blocknum, RBM_NORMAL,
|
|
state->checkstrategy);
|
|
LockBuffer(buffer, BT_READ);
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Perform the same basic sanity checking that nbtree itself performs for
|
|
* every page:
|
|
*/
|
|
_bt_checkpage(state->rel, buffer);
|
|
|
|
/* Only use copy of page in palloc()'d memory */
|
|
memcpy(page, BufferGetPage(buffer), BLCKSZ);
|
|
UnlockReleaseBuffer(buffer);
|
|
|
|
opaque = (BTPageOpaque) PageGetSpecialPointer(page);
|
|
|
|
if (P_ISMETA(opaque) && blocknum != BTREE_METAPAGE)
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("invalid meta page found at block %u in index \"%s\"",
|
|
blocknum, RelationGetRelationName(state->rel))));
|
|
|
|
/* Check page from block that ought to be meta page */
|
|
if (blocknum == BTREE_METAPAGE)
|
|
{
|
|
BTMetaPageData *metad = BTPageGetMeta(page);
|
|
|
|
if (!P_ISMETA(opaque) ||
|
|
metad->btm_magic != BTREE_MAGIC)
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("index \"%s\" meta page is corrupt",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel))));
|
|
|
|
if (metad->btm_version < BTREE_MIN_VERSION ||
|
|
metad->btm_version > BTREE_VERSION)
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("version mismatch in index \"%s\": file version %d, "
|
|
"current version %d, minimum supported version %d",
|
|
RelationGetRelationName(state->rel),
|
|
metad->btm_version, BTREE_VERSION,
|
|
BTREE_MIN_VERSION)));
|
|
|
|
/* Finished with metapage checks */
|
|
return page;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Deleted pages have no sane "level" field, so can only check non-deleted
|
|
* page level
|
|
*/
|
|
if (P_ISLEAF(opaque) && !P_ISDELETED(opaque) && opaque->btpo.level != 0)
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("invalid leaf page level %u for block %u in index \"%s\"",
|
|
opaque->btpo.level, blocknum, RelationGetRelationName(state->rel))));
|
|
|
|
if (!P_ISLEAF(opaque) && !P_ISDELETED(opaque) &&
|
|
opaque->btpo.level == 0)
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("invalid internal page level 0 for block %u in index \"%s\"",
|
|
blocknum, RelationGetRelationName(state->rel))));
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* Sanity checks for number of items on page.
|
|
*
|
|
* As noted at the beginning of _bt_binsrch(), an internal page must have
|
|
* children, since there must always be a negative infinity downlink
|
|
* (there may also be a highkey). In the case of non-rightmost leaf
|
|
* pages, there must be at least a highkey.
|
|
*
|
|
* This is correct when pages are half-dead, since internal pages are
|
|
* never half-dead, and leaf pages must have a high key when half-dead
|
|
* (the rightmost page can never be deleted). It's also correct with
|
|
* fully deleted pages: _bt_unlink_halfdead_page() doesn't change anything
|
|
* about the target page other than setting the page as fully dead, and
|
|
* setting its xact field. In particular, it doesn't change the sibling
|
|
* links in the deletion target itself, since they're required when index
|
|
* scans land on the deletion target, and then need to move right (or need
|
|
* to move left, in the case of backward index scans).
|
|
*/
|
|
maxoffset = PageGetMaxOffsetNumber(page);
|
|
if (maxoffset > MaxIndexTuplesPerPage)
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("Number of items on block %u of index \"%s\" exceeds MaxIndexTuplesPerPage (%u)",
|
|
blocknum, RelationGetRelationName(state->rel),
|
|
MaxIndexTuplesPerPage)));
|
|
|
|
if (!P_ISLEAF(opaque) && maxoffset < P_FIRSTDATAKEY(opaque))
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("internal block %u in index \"%s\" lacks high key and/or at least one downlink",
|
|
blocknum, RelationGetRelationName(state->rel))));
|
|
|
|
if (P_ISLEAF(opaque) && !P_RIGHTMOST(opaque) && maxoffset < P_HIKEY)
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("non-rightmost leaf block %u in index \"%s\" lacks high key item",
|
|
blocknum, RelationGetRelationName(state->rel))));
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
* In general, internal pages are never marked half-dead, except on
|
|
* versions of Postgres prior to 9.4, where it can be valid transient
|
|
* state. This state is nonetheless treated as corruption by VACUUM on
|
|
* from version 9.4 on, so do the same here. See _bt_pagedel() for full
|
|
* details.
|
|
*
|
|
* Internal pages should never have garbage items, either.
|
|
*/
|
|
if (!P_ISLEAF(opaque) && P_ISHALFDEAD(opaque))
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("internal page block %u in index \"%s\" is half-dead",
|
|
blocknum, RelationGetRelationName(state->rel)),
|
|
errhint("This can be caused by an interrupted VACUUM in version 9.3 or older, before upgrade. Please REINDEX it.")));
|
|
|
|
if (!P_ISLEAF(opaque) && P_HAS_GARBAGE(opaque))
|
|
ereport(ERROR,
|
|
(errcode(ERRCODE_INDEX_CORRUPTED),
|
|
errmsg("internal page block %u in index \"%s\" has garbage items",
|
|
blocknum, RelationGetRelationName(state->rel))));
|
|
|
|
return page;
|
|
}
|